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Hi,

 

Can anyone help? I need to know what is the best format and size to save a "typical" image for viewing on a website. And how to go about compressing images in Affinity. My site at http://originalartworks.net  is loading images okay, but I have to wait occasionally before moving to the next one...

 

Really grateful for any tips.

 

Regards,

 

Ken

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usually a resolution between 72 and 96 dpi is good for the web. about compression, i think that it all depends on the accuracy you need and whether your website is based upon images or these are just decorative elements of your pages. if you can tolerate some modest degrading in quality, i guess that a quality level between 75 and 85% should be adequate. You can set the compression level as quality level directly in the file->export dialog of affinity photo. choose the file format (all what i wrote until now applies to jpeg files) and set the quality level, then click on "export".

take care,

stefano

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Just one example: Your 4005542-Bethnal-Green has about 1,1 MB @ 90% quality. Try it with 59% or less (resulting in much quicker loading) and compare both files. We think this would be good enough.

 

What about image preloading and an additional small picture detail which provides better information for potential buyers?

 

 

We are sure, R C-R will give you much more detailed help soon.

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usually a resolution between 72 and 96 dpi is good for the web.

 

Dots per inch or pixels per inch is irrelevant for the web. Computer screens only know about pixel dimensions, not inches.

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Affinity Designer/Photo/Publisher 2 for Windows • Windows 10 Home/Pro
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  • Staff

Hi Ken,

Welcome to Affinity Forums :)
You can also try ImageOptim (open source app). It optimises images for web use without sacrificing quality (lossless compression by default but can also be configured to use lossy compression - that is sacrifice quality a little in exchange for even smaller sizes - check menu ImageOptim ▸ Preferences... ▸ Quality tab for lossy options). You just need to drag the images over the program interface and it does the rest.

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[…] You have given me some great pointers! (and a lot of work!) 

 

(Sorry!)  :)

 

With tools like Graphicconverter you get a preview to see which compression is the best (compromise) and prevent overwriting.

 

BTW: Your 3994253-Textured-Tulips is with 4096 pixel height much too big.

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